Cargando…

Ligand-Linked Nanoparticles-Based Hydrogen Gas Sensor with Excellent Homogeneous Temperature Field and a Comparative Stability Evaluation of Different Ligand-Linked Catalysts †

This paper presents a thermoelectric gas microsensor with improved stability where platinum nanoparticles linked by bifunctional ligands are used as a catalyst. The sensor design provides a homogeneous temperature field over the membrane, an important factor for the long-term stability of the cataly...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Pranti, Anmona Shabnam, Loof, Daniel, Kunz, Sebastian, Zielasek, Volkmar, Bäumer, Marcus, Lang, Walter
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6427191/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30857311
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/s19051205
_version_ 1783405155079684096
author Pranti, Anmona Shabnam
Loof, Daniel
Kunz, Sebastian
Zielasek, Volkmar
Bäumer, Marcus
Lang, Walter
author_facet Pranti, Anmona Shabnam
Loof, Daniel
Kunz, Sebastian
Zielasek, Volkmar
Bäumer, Marcus
Lang, Walter
author_sort Pranti, Anmona Shabnam
collection PubMed
description This paper presents a thermoelectric gas microsensor with improved stability where platinum nanoparticles linked by bifunctional ligands are used as a catalyst. The sensor design provides a homogeneous temperature field over the membrane, an important factor for the long-term stability of the catalyst. A comprehensive study of heat transfer from the chip is performed to evaluate the convection heat loss coefficient and to understand its effect on the homogeneity of the temperature field in a real-time situation. The effect of highly heat-conductive thermopiles is also analyzed by comparing the temperature distribution and power consumption with a thermoresistive sensor of the same dimensions and materials. Despite the thermopiles, the thermoelectric sensor gives better temperature homogeneity and consumes 23% less power than the thermoresistive sensor for 90 °C average temperature on the membrane. A comparative stability analysis among ligand-linked nanoparticles with 5 different ligands and unprotected nanoparticles was done through 3 consecutive 24 h tests under 1.5% continuous hydrogen gas flow. The sensors give very stable output, almost no degradation, through 72 h (3 × 24 h) tests for 3 different ligand-linked nanoparticles. The sensor design provides superb stability to the catalyst: Even catalysts of unprotected nanoparticles withstood more than 24 h and the sensor signal degradation is only 20%.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-6427191
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2019
publisher MDPI
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-64271912019-04-15 Ligand-Linked Nanoparticles-Based Hydrogen Gas Sensor with Excellent Homogeneous Temperature Field and a Comparative Stability Evaluation of Different Ligand-Linked Catalysts † Pranti, Anmona Shabnam Loof, Daniel Kunz, Sebastian Zielasek, Volkmar Bäumer, Marcus Lang, Walter Sensors (Basel) Article This paper presents a thermoelectric gas microsensor with improved stability where platinum nanoparticles linked by bifunctional ligands are used as a catalyst. The sensor design provides a homogeneous temperature field over the membrane, an important factor for the long-term stability of the catalyst. A comprehensive study of heat transfer from the chip is performed to evaluate the convection heat loss coefficient and to understand its effect on the homogeneity of the temperature field in a real-time situation. The effect of highly heat-conductive thermopiles is also analyzed by comparing the temperature distribution and power consumption with a thermoresistive sensor of the same dimensions and materials. Despite the thermopiles, the thermoelectric sensor gives better temperature homogeneity and consumes 23% less power than the thermoresistive sensor for 90 °C average temperature on the membrane. A comparative stability analysis among ligand-linked nanoparticles with 5 different ligands and unprotected nanoparticles was done through 3 consecutive 24 h tests under 1.5% continuous hydrogen gas flow. The sensors give very stable output, almost no degradation, through 72 h (3 × 24 h) tests for 3 different ligand-linked nanoparticles. The sensor design provides superb stability to the catalyst: Even catalysts of unprotected nanoparticles withstood more than 24 h and the sensor signal degradation is only 20%. MDPI 2019-03-09 /pmc/articles/PMC6427191/ /pubmed/30857311 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/s19051205 Text en © 2019 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Pranti, Anmona Shabnam
Loof, Daniel
Kunz, Sebastian
Zielasek, Volkmar
Bäumer, Marcus
Lang, Walter
Ligand-Linked Nanoparticles-Based Hydrogen Gas Sensor with Excellent Homogeneous Temperature Field and a Comparative Stability Evaluation of Different Ligand-Linked Catalysts †
title Ligand-Linked Nanoparticles-Based Hydrogen Gas Sensor with Excellent Homogeneous Temperature Field and a Comparative Stability Evaluation of Different Ligand-Linked Catalysts †
title_full Ligand-Linked Nanoparticles-Based Hydrogen Gas Sensor with Excellent Homogeneous Temperature Field and a Comparative Stability Evaluation of Different Ligand-Linked Catalysts †
title_fullStr Ligand-Linked Nanoparticles-Based Hydrogen Gas Sensor with Excellent Homogeneous Temperature Field and a Comparative Stability Evaluation of Different Ligand-Linked Catalysts †
title_full_unstemmed Ligand-Linked Nanoparticles-Based Hydrogen Gas Sensor with Excellent Homogeneous Temperature Field and a Comparative Stability Evaluation of Different Ligand-Linked Catalysts †
title_short Ligand-Linked Nanoparticles-Based Hydrogen Gas Sensor with Excellent Homogeneous Temperature Field and a Comparative Stability Evaluation of Different Ligand-Linked Catalysts †
title_sort ligand-linked nanoparticles-based hydrogen gas sensor with excellent homogeneous temperature field and a comparative stability evaluation of different ligand-linked catalysts †
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6427191/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30857311
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/s19051205
work_keys_str_mv AT prantianmonashabnam ligandlinkednanoparticlesbasedhydrogengassensorwithexcellenthomogeneoustemperaturefieldandacomparativestabilityevaluationofdifferentligandlinkedcatalysts
AT loofdaniel ligandlinkednanoparticlesbasedhydrogengassensorwithexcellenthomogeneoustemperaturefieldandacomparativestabilityevaluationofdifferentligandlinkedcatalysts
AT kunzsebastian ligandlinkednanoparticlesbasedhydrogengassensorwithexcellenthomogeneoustemperaturefieldandacomparativestabilityevaluationofdifferentligandlinkedcatalysts
AT zielasekvolkmar ligandlinkednanoparticlesbasedhydrogengassensorwithexcellenthomogeneoustemperaturefieldandacomparativestabilityevaluationofdifferentligandlinkedcatalysts
AT baumermarcus ligandlinkednanoparticlesbasedhydrogengassensorwithexcellenthomogeneoustemperaturefieldandacomparativestabilityevaluationofdifferentligandlinkedcatalysts
AT langwalter ligandlinkednanoparticlesbasedhydrogengassensorwithexcellenthomogeneoustemperaturefieldandacomparativestabilityevaluationofdifferentligandlinkedcatalysts